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Friday, May 22, 2015

The current parliament in Ethiopia
has only one opposition representative. Could this all change when up to 36
million voters head for the polls this Sunday?

These will be the first elections
since the death of the long-term Prime Minister Meles Zenawi in 2012. His
Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) has been in power for
almost a quarter of a century, and faces no reasonable prospect of defeat.

Who
is participating in the polls?

There are 57 political groups which have registered for the election. Many
of them are organised along ethnic lines. Apart from the EPRDF, some of the
main contenders include the Ethiopian Federal Democratic Unity Forum; a
coalition popularly known as Medrek (the Forum); Unity For Democracy And
Justice; and the Semayawi (Blue) Party, which was established in 2012, and has
earned itself a reputation for organizing protest rallies and which draws
support from young people.

Why have these elections caused controversy in the US?

US Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman has praised
Ethiopia as a democracy, prompting outrage among human rights organisations.
Speaking during a press briefing in Addis Ababa in April, Ms Sherman said:
"Ethiopia is a democracy that is moving forward in an election that we
expect to be free, fair and credible and open and inclusive in ways that
Ethiopia has moved forward in strengthening its democracy. Every time there is
an election it gets better and better."
In a joint letter, various groups, including Amnesty International USA, said
that through her statement the US endorsed ''a government that systematically
suppresses the fundamental rights of its citizens. Political pluralism and the
ability of Ethiopians to freely express themselves, associate, and participate in
peaceful assembly is far more restricted today than ten years ago under the
same government.''

What happened in previous elections?

In 2005, 174 opposition politicians won seats in the 547-seat parliament,
but many did not take them up after pronouncing the vote rigged.
In the 2010 polls, Girma Seifu, of the Unity for Democracy and Justice
(UDJ), was the sole opponent to win, while the ruling EPRDF garnered 99.6% of
all parliamentary seats. An independent candidate was also elected.

What do opposition parties say about these polls?

The fractured opposition groups have accused the government of harassing
their members and carrying out illegal detentions ahead of the elections.
One politician, Yonathan Tesfaye, spokesman for the Blue Party, told
journalists that some party members had been beaten, especially in the southern
region. But ruling party spokesman Desta Tesfaw dismissed the allegations and
accused opposition groups of trying to discredit the elections, saying:
"They don't have their own policies and agendas, and that's clear to the
Ethiopian people."

Which outsiders are monitoring the polls?

The African Union has sent election monitors, but the European Union won't
be sending observers. The EU said it hasn't been invited. Source ( BBC)